Tag: Welsh moral culture
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Howell Harris (1714–1773), The Engine of the Welsh Revival and the Birth of an Evangelical Wales

This article follows my recent study of Daniel Rowland (1713–1790), the great evangelist of the Welsh Methodist Revival and one of the defining architects of modern Welsh Nonconformity. If Rowland represents the revival at its most visible, the pulpit phenomenon, the national preacher, the man whose sermons drew thousands, then Howell Harris must be understood…
Antony David Davies
18th century Wales, bible, Brecknockshire, Breconshire, Calvinistic Methodists, chapel societies, christianity, church, Church of England in Wales, Daniel Rowland, evangelical revival, History, Howell Harris, jesus, lay preaching, Llangeitho, Methodist Revival, Nonconformist Wales, religious societies, revival preaching, Sunday School Movement, Talgarth, Trefeca, Welsh Calvinistic Methodism, Welsh chapel history, Welsh culture and identity, Welsh evangelicalism, Welsh hymnody, Welsh language and religion, Welsh Methodist Revival, Welsh moral culture, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh preaching, Welsh Protestantism, Welsh religious history, Welsh Social History, Welsh spirituality, William Williams Pantycelyn
